Though the term today often refers to a member of the
Camorra (i.e. a Camorrista), the historical figure of the "guappo" is not necessarily synonymous with the Camorrista. It is a historical figure in the
Neapolitan area, distinguishable by his smart or overdressed
dandy-like appearance, his unusual pose that serves to draw attention to him, and the particular care he lavishes on his body and face. The guappo could be characterized as "simple" or "posh" according to the clothes he wore: the former preferred extravagant and flashy clothes while the latter loved to dress in clothes from the best tailors in Naples. Originally, the guappo was rather a violent free spirit; free from the law as well as the "official" Camorra, with his proper code of honour, at once an extortionist, criminal, and often a
pimp, while also a rectifier of wrong for the local neighbourhood and a benefactor of artists of the
café chantant. He was sometimes allied with, and sometimes a rival of the Camorra. Around 1860, a guappo was described as an independent and individualist camorrista. When the Camorra as an organisation was weak, the guappo flourished. After the first
mass trial against the Camorra in 1911-12, and the advent of
Fascist rule the Camorra as an organisation was nearly destroyed. The local guappo returned and the interwar period (1918–1939) was the heyday of the individualist guappo power. After
World War II, with the return of the Camorra, the figure of the guappo eventually merged into the organisation. A typical guappo of that era was
Pasquale Simonetti, also known as "Pascalone ‘e Nola", who controlled the Naples fruit market. He was married to
Pupetta Maresca and famous for publicly slapping American Mafia boss,
Lucky Luciano, at the
Agnano racetrack. (In fact, the perpetrator was Francesco Pirozzi, known as ''Ciccillo 'o francese'', one of the men of Camorra boss
Alfredo Maisto.) ==In art and popular culture==